by Tony » Fri Nov 10, 2006 5:43 pm
That would be nice, but also expensive, and a fair bit of work and trouble, unless you already have most of the parts on hand.
A direct motor/blower coupling would be far simpler. Just a normal commercial shaft coupler would work fine.
One flange slips straight onto the motor, secured with a keyway and set screw in the usual way. The other flange can be suitably machined to pilot direct onto the blower drive gear, and be secured with the six original gear securing bolts. An oil seal in the original blower front plate will finish the job. That would be a very compact and simple solution.
A drive pulley will require a custom drive snout with an additional support bearing to handle the radial belt loads.
I believe we have established that this blower is probably going to have in the region of 700 CFM flow capacity when driven directly by a 60Hz four pole induction motor. There is probably no real need for a radical step up, or step down in Rpm.
A toothed belt is going to add additional noise, and will require a guard and some means of adjusting belt tension. Direct coupling only usually needs some shims, and once it is aligned, it will never move. The rubber in the coupling will be quite forgiving.
Over twenty years ago, I direct coupled my homemade 7.5Hp reciprocating air compressor with great success, and the drive coupling has never been touched. The multiple vee belt drive of my 10Hp belt driven air flow bench blower has been a constant nuisance with slip and belt stretch.
Drive belts are a curse, and if they can be eliminated, so much the better. A variable frequency drive can step up motor speed as well as reduce it by running the motor at higher than normal mains frequency. There is no loss of horsepower doing it that way either.
MY next flow bench blower will be another large centrifugal direct coupled to a 15Hp two pole induction motor. That motor will be driven at up to 6,000Rpm at around 110Hz maximum. No troublesome belts required, the blower rotor sits right on the end of the motor shaft, very compact, and the original motor bearings are already suitably rated.
I only mention this to illustrate that these days, doing it with electronics can sometimes be a more practical and viable alternative to using drive belts to match motor Rpm to load Rpm.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.